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23680: (pub) Chamberlain: Haiti's new government accused of rights violations (fwd)



From: Greg Chamberlain <GregChamberlain@compuserve.com>

     By Joseph Guyler Delva

     PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti, Oct 31 (Reuters) - Father Gerard Jean-Juste was
feeding children at his church in Port-au-Prince when hooded police burst
in, firing shots, smashing windows and throwing him to the ground.
     The Oct. 13 arrest and imprisonment of the well-known Roman Catholic
priest, who three weeks later remained jailed on a charge that carries a
fine equivalent to 30 U.S. cents, cast a fresh spotlight on growing
concerns over alleged human rights violations by Haiti's U.S.-backed
interim leadership.
     A growing chorus of rights groups, joined by the Catholic Church and
the United Nations' special envoy to Haiti, have called on Prime Minister
Gerard Latortue's government to respect human rights in the impoverished
Caribbean country.
     Latortue's government was installed after President Jean-Bertrand
Aristide left Haiti under U.S. and French pressure in the face of a bloody
rebellion in February. It is trying to quell an uprising that may have
killed up to 170 people in the last two months.
     "Human rights are being trampled underfoot," said Rev. Jean Hanssens,
a Belgian who heads the peace and justice committee of the Catholic Church
in Haiti.
     "When there are real charges, they should be formulated with evidence
to judicial authorities. But you cannot arrest people on the basis of
rumors," Hanssens said.
     Jean-Juste, who has spent decades working with Haiti's poor, is one of
around 700 Aristide supporters in custody in the capital on vague charges.
     "I was distributing food to a group of children when heavily armed
police stormed my presbytery and brutally arrested me without a warrant,"
he told Reuters.
     Although told he was suspected of financing the recent violence,
Jean-Juste was being held on a minor charge of disturbing the peace, which
if proved would cost him a fine of 11 Haitian gourdes (about 30 US cents).
     Amnesty International has suggested Jean-Juste, a staunch Aristide
backer, may be a prisoner of conscience. "Indefinite detention without
charge or trial, as a rule too often applied in Haiti, contravenes
fundamental human rights and the country's main legislation," Amnesty said.
     Local and international rights groups have accused the Latortue
government of carrying out arbitrary arrests and targeting Aristide
supporters, while former soldiers who killed police officers during the
February revolt against Aristide have not been charged with any crimes.
     Latortue in turn has accused Aristide's Lavalas Family party of
masterminding the new outbreak of violence to hamper Haiti's political
transition.
     Justice Minister Bernard Gousse, rejecting allegations of rights
abuse, says Haiti is not holding people indefinitely without charges. He
said Haitian law allows arrests without warrants.
     "When you have continued violations, you are in a situation of crime
in progress; therefore you can arrest without a warrant not only those who
commit the crime, but also those who are masterminding those crimes," he
said.
     Juan Gabriel Valdes, the U.N. special envoy to Haiti, called on the
government to respect human rights as it cracks down on criminal gangs
responsible for the recent violence.
     "It is essential, for the government to be strong and respected, to
respect the rule of law and the procedures the country has given itself,"
Valdes said.
     Port-au-Prince Archbishop Serge Miot accused the government of
attacking the Catholic Church and persecuting Aristide supporters. Police
have threatened to raid the archbishop's palace to search for bandits.
     "There is a general political repression campaign against Aristide
allies, but that never solved the problems of any government. This can only
make things worse," he said.